I think we can already call the 2020 US Presidential election. Donald Trump will win in a landslide. Without credible opposition, there is no alternative outcome, and right now the Democrats are very far from being credible opposition.

At one time, the Federal Reserve’s sole mandate was to maintain stable prices and to “fight inflation.” To the Fed, the financial press, and most everyone else “inflation” means rising prices instead of its original and true definition as an increase in the money supply. Rising prices are a consequence – a very painful consequence – of money printing.

In a four-part YouTube video series, Andy Nowicki, one of the founders of the Alt-Right who has no pretensions to leadership, examines the thorny question of why the would-be "leaders" of the movement have failed so resoundingly. Among those examined are Richard "Heilgate" Spencer, Andrew "Gas the K***s" Anglin, and Matthew "Faith, Fuck, & Family" Heimbach.

Today is the anniversary of the German invasion of Russia, known to history by the name Operation Barbarossa. This was the start of what was undoubtedly the most titanic struggle in human history, between two incredible fighting machines, the German Wehrmacht and the Soviet Red Army.

Andy Nowicki reflects upon—and revulses over—a new Instagram page which demonstrates conclusively that marrying men in the West have officially forfeited all masculine dignity and have instead become wailing, weeping, walking vaginas.Connected Content:Dancing Dads of Doom

Filmmaker, film festival director, and Affirmative Right contributor Richard Wolstencroft talks to the Meat Bone Express podcast, explaining the new "radical free speech" policy of the Melbourne Underground Film Festival (MUFF).

Black pill: As it stands today, Whites are part of a declining civilisation and a dying demographic. Yes, "they"—whoever "they" may be—may very well replace us, as well as themselves through rootless race-mixing.

White pill: Having said that, it is extremely difficult to predict the future, especially using projections of past trends. This is because here there is the assumption that the future will be essentially the same as the past, which it almost never is.

The 2018 World Cup is being held in Russia, which will result in thousands of foreign tourists. One Russian lawmaker, who concedes the female propensity for promiscuity with foreigners, has offered some sound advice for Russian women:

Over seven centuries ago, the most famous literary muse of all time—namely Dante Alighieri’s beloved Beatrice—ascended to her eternal glory. Dante followed his muse into the bourn of the undiscovered country three decades later, but not before composing a host of works which testify to the full extent of the Beatrician influence on the Dantean imagination.

Affirmative Right chief editor Colin Liddell comments on the recent "stormy" G7 meeting in Canada and Trump's forthcoming "show down" meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. Was Trump merely using the G7 meeting to burnish his "Mad Man" credentials in order to get the only deal that makes sense for America in an increasingly multipolar World?

When did WWII begin? Most would say it was when Germany invaded Poland in 1939, but a good case can be made for July 7th, 1937, when the Japanese kicked off their invasion of China, a campaign that lasted eight years and became a major part of WWII. One of the biggest and most dramatic events in that war was the deliberate flooding of a large area of China in 1938 by the Nationalist Chinese government in an attempt to halt the rapid Japanese advance. This occurred 80 years ago today.

While audiences were being treated to depictions of whites as berserkers and cannibals in such films as The Mad Butcher (1971), Raw Meat (1973), The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974), Welcome to Arrow Beach (1974), Cannibal Apocalypse (1980), Eating Raoul (1982), The People Under the Stairs (1991), and Silence of the Lambs (1991), Africans and other indigenous peoples of the Third World were increasingly being portrayed as repositories of wisdom and common sense.

At the age of 12, I still clung to my own innocence with a desperate tenacity. Still, I knew on some level that it was a lost cause. During the summer of 1983, as a rising seventh grader, I recall one incident at the neighborhood pool which somehow put things in a queasy sort of perspective.